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Heterogeneous repolarization creates ventricular tachycardia circuits in healed myocardial infarction scar

Kamilla Kelemen, Ian D. Greener, Xiaoping Wan, Shankar Parajuli and J. Kevin Donahue ()
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Kamilla Kelemen: MetroHealth Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University
Ian D. Greener: MetroHealth Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University
Xiaoping Wan: MetroHealth Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University
Shankar Parajuli: University of Massachusetts Medical School
J. Kevin Donahue: University of Massachusetts Medical School

Nature Communications, 2022, vol. 13, issue 1, 1-14

Abstract: Abstract Arrhythmias originating in scarred ventricular myocardium are a major cause of death, but the underlying mechanism allowing these rhythms to exist remains unknown. This gap in knowledge critically limits identification of at-risk patients and treatment once arrhythmias become manifest. Here we show that potassium voltage-gated channel subfamily E regulatory subunits 3 and 4 (KCNE3, KCNE4) are uniquely upregulated at arrhythmia sites within scarred myocardium. Ventricular arrhythmias occur in areas with a distinctive cardiomyocyte repolarization pattern, where myocyte tracts with short repolarization times connect to myocytes tracts with long repolarization times. We found this unique pattern of repolarization heterogeneity only in ventricular arrhythmia circuits. In contrast, conduction abnormalities were ubiquitous within scar. These repolarization heterogeneities are consistent with known functional effects of KCNE3 and KCNE4 on the slow delayed-rectifier potassium current. We observed repolarization heterogeneity using conventional cardiac electrophysiologic techniques that could potentially translate to identification of at-risk patients. The neutralization of the repolarization heterogeneities could represent a potential strategy for the elimination of ventricular arrhythmia circuits.

Date: 2022
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DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28418-1

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